From Military.com:
“4 Things to Know About
POW/MIA Recognition Day”
You Are Not Forgotten – that's
the central phrase behind the POW/MIA remembrance movement which honors
America's prisoners of war, those who are still missing in action and their
families. Many of our service members suffered as prisoners of war during
several decades of varying conflicts. While some of them made it home, tens of
thousands more never did. Here are four things to know about how this important
movement got started, what it means and how you can help recognize it.
POW/MIA Recognition Day POW/MIA
Recognition Day is commemorated on the third Friday of every September, a date
that's not associated with any particular war. In 1979, Congress and the
president passed resolutions making it official after the families of the more
than 2,500 Vietnam War POW/MIAs pushed for full accountability. During
the first POW/MIA Recognition Day commemoration, a ceremony was held at the
National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., while the 1st Tactical Squadron from
Langley Air Force Base in Virginia flew the missing man formation. Most
ceremonies since then have been held at the Pentagon, and many smaller
observances have cropped up across the nation and around the world on military
installations. The point of POW/MIA Recognition Day is to ensure that
American remembers to stand behind those who serve and to make sure we do
everything we can to account for those who have never returned.
POW/MIA Numbers In order
to comprehend the importance of this movement, all you need to do is look at
the sheer number of Americans who have been listed as POW/MIAs.
According to a Congressional
Research Service report on POWs:
130,201 World War II service
members were imprisoned; 14,072 them died
7,140 Korean War service members
were imprisoned; 2,701 of them died
725 Vietnam War service members
were imprisoned; 64 of them died
37 service members were
imprisoned during conflicts since 1991, including both Gulf wars; none are
still in captivity
According to the Defense
POW/MIA Accounting Agency, 83,114 Americans who fought in those wars are still
missing, including:
73,515 from World War II (an
approximate number due to limited or conflicting data)
7,841 from the Korean War
1,626 from Vietnam
126 from the Cold War
6 from conflicts since 1991
The DPAA said about 75 percent of
those missing Americans are somewhere in the Asia-Pacific. More than 41,000
have been presumed lost at sea. Efforts to find those men, identify them and
bring them home are constant. For example, the DPAA said that in the past year
it has accounted for 41 men missing during the Korean War: 10 had been
previously buried as unknowns, 26 were from remains turned over by North Korea
in the 1990s, one was from a recovery operation, and four were combinations of
remains and recovery operations.
The POW/MIA Flag The
traditional POW/MIA flag that's well-known across America was actually created
many years before the remembrance day became official. In 1971, a woman
named Mary Hoff contacted a flag company near her home to see if a flag
reminding people of POWs and the missing could be made. She was one of the many
waiting to see if her husband, Navy Lt. Cmdr. Michael Hoff, would ever return
home after his plane had been shot down over Laos. World War II pilot
Newt Heisley designed the now-famous flag, which was made in black and white to
represent the sorrow, anxiety and hope symbolized by the image of the gaunt man
featured on it. For every POW/MIA Recognition Day since 1982, the flag
has flown just below the stars and stripes at the White House – the only other
flag to ever do so. In 1998, Congress ordered it to also be displayed on Armed
Forces Day, Memorial Day, Flag Day, Independence Day and Veterans Day.
Bracelets Help Continue the
Support While the POW/MIA flag reminds us to never forget our prisoners of
war and missing in action, bracelets also became a popular personal form of
remembrance in the 1970s. They're still worn and purchased by families and
veterans, who are also wearing bracelets for those who were killed in action in
more recent wars. If you don't feel the need to buy a flag or bracelet,
it's still important to remember the extreme sacrifices of our POW/MIAs and
America's pact to them: That we will take care of them and, no matter how much
time has passed, they will make it back home.
^ It’s important to remember the
men and women who were POWs and for those who were/are MIAs. ^
https://www.military.com/history/4-things-know-pow-mia-recognition-day.html
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